Friday, June 11, 2010
Really Wrote on Medved
Since the recent release of Who Really Wrote the Bible?
(see here and here), Gil Weinreich and Eyal Rav-Noy have appeared on numerous radio shows to promote the book. On Thursday, June 17, from 1 to 2 PM Pacific Time, Gil and Eyal will be on Michael Medved's show, one of the most important in the country, to discuss the book at some length. Options for listening live by radio or Internet, or listening later via the archives, are available at the show's website.
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Dreaming of Chitwan
Another busy week has started, making me wish we were in Nepal's Chitwan National Park instead. Not that that's exactly an idyllic place -- problems continued with poaching, and for some time last year, amid Maoist-fomented turbulence, Nepal's government was stalling on relicensing the lodges. Still, it doesn't get much better than this.
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Ideas in Action
My old haunt TCSDaily has morphed into a TV show called Ideas in Action. I'll be interested to see how that goes. I have fond memories of when TCS, or Tech central Station as it was once called, was in full swing and I wrote for it on subjects ranging from MacArthur to the Strad.
Contemplating e-books
"'Vanity' Press Goes Digital," enthusiastic article about self-publishing e-books in today's Wall Street Journal (which publication, incidentally, I read on paper after picking up from the end of a fairly long driveway), makes me want to self-publish some e-books based on ideas I've had, including ones I've not yet even run by a publisher. The world has changed, and based on my experience of publishing-industry gatekeepers, their eclipse is not much of a loss.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Glamour tradeoffs
Recommended reading: Virginia Postrel on glamour, Obama, health insurance, wigs and more in an interview at Reason. One great thing about Virginia's work is the combination of diverse subject matter and unifying themes, and another is that her writing never gets caught in a rut.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Crisis of 2025
Contrary to Jeremy Stein's scenario, I'd think a financial crisis of 2025 would have more to do with out-of-control entitlements and downgraded sovereign debt than with windpower derivatives (unless perhaps that crisis will already have hit when the windpower one arrives). Excerpt:
Washington, D.C., May 27, 2025. Just four months into his first term, President Scott P. Brown faces what is rapidly becoming a severe financial crisis, with the collapse yesterday of yet another Stable Wind Farm Trust. The failed institution, Magna-SWIFT, is the largest thus far, with over $90 billion in assets. Rumors also continued to swirl about the condition of the Houston Power House, one of the nation’s largest clearinghouses specializing in weather and power derivatives. Experts warned that a major clearinghouse failure could have devastating implications.More here.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Hamilton, Burr and their banks
My newest at Research: "A Tale of Origins," on how outsized personalities and political tumult created some major financial institutions. Excerpt:
When Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr dueled at dawn on July 11, 1804, the fight was not just between a former Treasury secretary and a sitting vice president, two political heavyweights of the early American republic. It was also between two founders of major financial institutions that are still in existence (following mergers and name changes) over two centuries later.Whole thing here. Also, I'll be discussing this article on the Gabe Wisdom Show on Wed., 5/26 at 7pm ET, which can be listened to by radio or Internet at the show link and later here.
Indeed, the animosity that led to the duel that took Hamilton’s life and turned Burr into a political outcast was exacerbated by their respective roles in setting up some of America’s first financial firms.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Friday, May 21, 2010
Random links
Things that have gotten my attention at times on a sunny Friday afternoon:
-- John Guardiano declaims against anti-Rand Paul reactions at FrumForum, where he and I write.
-- Stuart Kauffman on NPR on "The Actual, the Possible and What's Real."
-- An absorbing interactive package at (my sometime employer) Scientific American about "12 Events That Will Change Everything."
UPDATE: And the Kauffman piece above leads (though I had to find the link) to a fascinating (notwithstanding density) discussion of "Five Problems in the Philosophy of Mind."
-- John Guardiano declaims against anti-Rand Paul reactions at FrumForum, where he and I write.
-- Stuart Kauffman on NPR on "The Actual, the Possible and What's Real."
-- An absorbing interactive package at (my sometime employer) Scientific American about "12 Events That Will Change Everything."
UPDATE: And the Kauffman piece above leads (though I had to find the link) to a fascinating (notwithstanding density) discussion of "Five Problems in the Philosophy of Mind."
Planetary journalism
Congratulations to George Musser, friend, colleague and occasional blog commentor, on winning the American Astronomical Society's Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award!
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
NJ lunar snafu
Some unfortunate space-related news from New Jersey: "Trenton, we have a problem: NJ's souvenir moon rock missing since 1970s."
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Nomad piece
Recommended reading: "Between Life and Death in the West," an excerpt from Ayaan Hirsi Ali's Nomad: From Islam to America: A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilizations.
Monday, May 17, 2010
Fusion voting, gnostocracy
It looks like a busy week. Here are a couple of quick links:
-- Bruce Bartlett on how "fusion voting" could give third parties some sway. It strikes me as an attractive proposition at a time when a third party plausibly could be less ideologically extreme than the first two.
-- Walter Russell Mead on how efforts against climate change represent "gnostocracy," or rule by experts, which he dismisses. But aren't there some subjects about which the experts genuinely know much more than the general public?
-- Bruce Bartlett on how "fusion voting" could give third parties some sway. It strikes me as an attractive proposition at a time when a third party plausibly could be less ideologically extreme than the first two.
-- Walter Russell Mead on how efforts against climate change represent "gnostocracy," or rule by experts, which he dismisses. But aren't there some subjects about which the experts genuinely know much more than the general public?
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Soylent Green
The chief of child psychiatry where I work is a quirky fellow. Hes a psychiatrist, but is also interested in collecting coffins at antique shops, singing in a choir, and seeing offkilter movies. But I think he maybe onto something especially when it comes to the environment. He was talking about Soylent Green which is made from sea plankton and maybe helpful for the environment. Although it may taste like "nautilus crud" it may be the answer for the ambiguous hole in the ozone layer. You can also read more about it Here
Dan Summer
UPDATE: Or just watch.
Dan Summer
UPDATE: Or just watch.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Anti-Ron Paul update
Not long ago, Ron Paul was denying that auditing the Fed would mean "interference in or dictation of monetary policy by Congress or the GAO."
Now he's complaining that current legislation does not allow "a full and ongoing audit of all of the Federal Reserve's lending and monetary policy activity."
What's the point of Congress auditing monetary policy if not to affect it, and what plausible effect could this have other than to make it more inflationary?
More on Ron Paul and monetary policy: here and here.
Now he's complaining that current legislation does not allow "a full and ongoing audit of all of the Federal Reserve's lending and monetary policy activity."
What's the point of Congress auditing monetary policy if not to affect it, and what plausible effect could this have other than to make it more inflationary?
More on Ron Paul and monetary policy: here and here.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Contentious magazine
Review copy received: Running Commentary: The Contentious Magazine that Transformed the Jewish Left into the Neoconservative Right, by Benjamin Balint. I may have something on it at some point. I've had my differences with the magazine over the years, but the first time I got a book review published there, in 1992, was a truly happy moment for a 20-something opinion journalist.
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Conservatives 'at war'
My latest at FrumForum: "Conservatives Aren't 'At War' With the Left." Excerpt:
Whole thing, including a mention of the once-great Instapundit, here.
Surely, there are many people who are amenable to conservative arguments but averse to the overheated style in which these are often presented. Moreover, the “we’re at war” talk is a gift to the left, as it provides handy citations for convincing the center that the right is crazy and irresponsible.
Better to win calmly than to lose hysterically.
Whole thing, including a mention of the once-great Instapundit, here.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Sci blog
New blog: Rennie's Last Nerve, by John Rennie, former editor-in-chief at Scientific American. With a double-headed lizard.
Radio rationality
Recommended reading; "The Bravest Man on Radio," Tim Mak on Michael Medved.
UPDATE: On other hand, as a commentor there points out, he does work here.
UPDATE: On other hand, as a commentor there points out, he does work here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)